macca Posted November 26, 2008 Share Posted November 26, 2008 Or am I exaggerating? There are two white promos on Ebay right now. Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
Mick Holdsworth Posted November 26, 2008 Share Posted November 26, 2008 Or am I exaggerating? There are two white promos on Ebay right now. Also John Manship has a red one, but i think it is probably a coincidence. I'd be far more concerned about the Sensations / Demanding Man, finishing tonight, for no other reason than where it is coming from (Think how rare the royal Esquires is ... ) Cheers Mick Holdsworth https://northern-soul-records.com https://motownsound.co.uk Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
Prophonics 2029 Posted November 26, 2008 Share Posted November 26, 2008 Sensations I was so surprised to see a 1966 tag on the record, I thought it was a crossover thing from 1969 73 Doh. Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
Tony Smith Posted November 26, 2008 Share Posted November 26, 2008 Sensations I was so surprised to see a 1966 tag on the record, I thought it was a crossover thing from 1969 73 Doh. I think that refers to the inception of the label rather than the release of this particular number. Just as Mar-V-lus has 1963 on it's label for most of the releases. Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
Garethx Posted November 26, 2008 Share Posted November 26, 2008 (edited) I think that refers to the inception of the label rather than the release of this particular number. Just as Mar-V-lus has 1963 on it's label for most of the releases. I think Tony is absolutely correct regarding this point. The particular copy of The Sensations for auction is about the cleanest copy of the record I've seen, so probably worth the bucks to those wishing to upgrade to a minter. A great record into the bargain: group Northern gets no better than this double-sider in my opinion. Something has occured to me about Way Out releases which exist on several variants of the label such as Bobby Wade I'm In Love With You and Jesse Fisher's You're Not Loving A Beginner: conventional wisdom has it that the first issue of these is on the red and white logo (as per Demanding Man), and that the other releases (grey in the case of Bobby Wade, magenta and yellow in the instance of Jesse Fisher) are later issues, carrying lesser pricetags. I wonder if this is really the case. My theory is that the ones on the red and white logo could very well be be later pressings on remaindered blanks of the "c.1966" stock. If you think about it any record label would press on the latest, 'hip and happening' variant of its label design first, then, when stocks of this are exhausted and a 45 demands another pressing run, on its older blanks if they happen to be lying around. Something to think about next time a red and white Jesse Fisher is offered at a price premium above the multicoloured label version. Edited November 26, 2008 by garethx Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
Prophonics 2029 Posted November 26, 2008 Share Posted November 26, 2008 any ideas on the date of this track then, so I am not fare off the mark. Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
Benji Posted November 26, 2008 Share Posted November 26, 2008 I think Tony is absolutely correct regarding this point. The particular copy of The Sensations for auction is about the cleanest copy of the record I've seen, so probably worth the bucks to those wishing to upgrade to a minter. A great record into the bargain: group Northern gets no better than this double-sider in my opinion. Something has occured to me about Way Out releases which exist on several variants of the label such as Bobby Wade I'm In Love With You and Jesse Fisher's You're Not Loving A Beginner: conventional wisdom has it that the first issue of these is on the red and white logo (as per Demanding Man), and that the other releases (grey in the case of Bobby Wade, magenta and yellow in the instance of Jesse Fisher) are later issues, carrying lesser pricetags. I wonder if this is really the case. My theory is that the ones on the red and white logo could very well be be later pressings on remaindered blanks of the "c.1966" stock. If you think about it any record label would press on the latest, 'hip and happening' variant of its label design first, then, when stocks of this are exhausted and a 45 demands another pressing run, on its older blanks if they happen to be lying around. Something to think about next time a red and white Jesse Fisher is offered at a price premium above the multicoloured label version. I don't think that the red/white releases are later pressings. There was a very good article about Way Out in Shades of Soul. The later, multi-coloured releases were nationally distributed (by MGM I recall?) and since most of the earlier releases did quite well, the label owners had the funds to invest in re-designed multicoloured printed labels. quite simple to me... Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
Benji Posted November 26, 2008 Share Posted November 26, 2008 any ideas on the date of this track then, so I am not fare off the mark. 1966. Here's the listing lifted from Dave Rimmer's site 2605 - Lou Ragland & Bandmasters - Never Let Me Go / Party At Lesters - 1964 2699 - The Springers - I Know Why / I Know My Baby Loves Me - 1964 2699 - The Springers - I Know Why / Last Heartbreak - 1964 2799/80 - The Springers - Last Heartbreak / Why - 1964 3359/60 - The Gaylords - Never Go Back To GA / Loose Beat - 196? 5564 - Joan Bias - I Don't Know What's Right Any More / Crazy Over You - 196? 5696 - The Springers - You Can Laugh / It's Been A Long Time - 1965 1966 - Verna & Bob - More Soul / I'm In Love With You - 1965 W01 - Norman Scott - Baby Don't Go / Ain't That A Heartache - 1966 1047 - The Sensations - Get On Up Mama / I Won't Be Hurt - 1966 5945 - Laura Green - Don Deopo / Come Have A Drink With Me - 1966 2001 - Bobby Wade - Four Walls And One Window / Can't You Hear Me Calling - 1966 2003 - The Harmonics - Which Way / Harmonics On The Warpath - 1966 2005 - The Sensations - Gonna Step Aside / Demanding Man - 1966 2006 - Volcanic Eruption - I've Got Something Going For Me / Red Robin - 1966 ? - Ben Iverson & The Hornets - Love Me / Fool's Rush In - 1967 4957 - Lester Johnson & The Hornets - Wedding Day / Jamaica Farewell - 1967 5947 - The Sensations - Too Shy / Please Baby, Please - 1967 5696 - The Springers - It's Been A Long Time / You Can Laugh - 1967 2669 - The Springers - I Know My Baby Loves Me So / I Know Why - 1967 2699 - The Springers - I Know Why / Last Heartbreak - 1967 1000 - The Sensations - Gotta Find Myself Another Girl / Lonely World - 1968 1001 - The Soul Notes - Don't Make Me Beg / How Long Will It Last - 1968 1002 - Fred Towles - Too Much Monkey Business / Part 2 - 1968 1003 - The Sensations - Oh / I Guess That's Life - 1968 1004 - Fred Towles & The Jacksonians - Hook It To The Mule / Inst. - 1969 1005 - The Sensations - It's A New Day / Two Can Make It - 1969 1006 - The Soul Notes - How Long Will It Last / I Got Everything I Need - 1969 1051 - The Soul Notes - How Long Will It Last / Don't Make Me Bag - 1969 011 - The Boss Singers - My God On High / So Many Years - 1970 101 - Ruby Carter & The Exceptional Three - Unlucky Girl / What About Me - 1971 103 - Bobby Wade - I'm In Love With You / Down Here On The Ground - 1971 104 - Jesse Fisher - You're Not Loving A Beginner / Waiting - 1971 105 - Embryo Infinity Rebirth - Let Me Tell You A Story / Walls - 1971 106 - Jesse Fisher - Why / Little John - 1971 984 - Jesse Fuller - Super Funky / Part 2 - 1972 100 - Jesse Fuller - Mr.Super Nobody / Don't Cheat On Me - 1973 Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
boba Posted November 26, 2008 Share Posted November 26, 2008 1966. Here's the listing lifted from Dave Rimmer's site 2605 - Lou Ragland & Bandmasters - Never Let Me Go / Party At Lesters - 1964 2699 - The Springers - I Know Why / I Know My Baby Loves Me - 1964 2699 - The Springers - I Know Why / Last Heartbreak - 1964 2799/80 - The Springers - Last Heartbreak / Why - 1964 3359/60 - The Gaylords - Never Go Back To GA / Loose Beat - 196? 5564 - Joan Bias - I Don't Know What's Right Any More / Crazy Over You - 196? 5696 - The Springers - You Can Laugh / It's Been A Long Tis Me Bag - 1969 011 - The Boss Singers - My God On High / So Many Years - 1970 101 - Ruby Carter & The Exceptional Three - Unlucky Girl / What About Me - 1971 103 - Bobby Wade - I'm In Love With You / Down Here On The Ground - 1971 104 - Jesse Fisher - You're Not Loving A Beginner / Waiting - 1971 105 - Embryo Infinity Rebirth - Let Me Tell You A Story / Walls - 1971 106 - Jesse Fisher - Why / Little John - 1971 984 - Jesse Fuller - Super Funky / Part 2 - 1972 100 - Jesse Fuller - Mr.Super Nobody / Don't Cheat On Me - 1973 volcanic eruption is 2002 not 2006 Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
Guest Posted November 26, 2008 Share Posted November 26, 2008 The multi-coloured labels 100 to 105 were MGM distributed 1968 /69. the last multi in the series 106 seems not to be MGM dist. but carries the same design but in much poorer quality paper & print. I imagine Way Out retained the design and got a local printer to copy it for that release. I personally can't see any milage in the theory Red & White being a second press... Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
Garethx Posted November 26, 2008 Share Posted November 26, 2008 Not as straightforward as this at all Benji. The Jesse Fisher YNLAB 45 is not distributed by MGM. While the multicolored issue is on an MGM-type blank the rest of the typesetting (i.e. the black type) is exactly the same as the red type on the 'early', red and white stock, and doesn't emanate from an MGM pressing facility. The football star Jim Brown was the major financial backer of Way Out. He started filming The Dirty Dozen after the end of the 1965-1966 season for MGM. In order to finish the movie he refused to return from England to play for The Cleveland Browns in the 1966-67 season, effectively retiring from the sport. MGM distribution of Brown's Way Out logo was presumably a sweetener to the nascent film star and a way for the notoriously staid MGM to cash in on the soul music boom with a label fronted and guaranteed by one of the most visible and charismatic African Americans of that or any other time. Unfortunately for them Way Out couldn't unearth anything like a consistent hitmaker, probably a fault of distribution and radio-plugging shortcomings in an unfamiliar part of the market rather than a lack of quality in the actual product. By 1969 Brown's film career was in decline as he never really replicated the success of his first film. MGM would have been keen to offload fripperies like the notoriously-difficult Brown's pet record label. The releases of this period are not MGM distributed: rather they feature the credit "BIG JIM RECORDS: A division of Way Out Ent." My contention is that in order to release Brown from his film contract part of the deal was offloading remaining physical assets like the magenta and yellow label blanks, of which there must have been a few, seeing as very few of the MGM-distributed releases of 67-69 sold in any great number. The chaos of Brown's financial affairs might go some way to explaining the often erratic nature of the label's releases. At this time Brown was a notoriously profligate spender, gambler and high-roller. His financial affairs often lurched from feast to famine. Because of this the Way Out label continued in much the same manner, maybe explaining why some releases are plentiful, while others such as Demanding Man are decidedly scarce. Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
Guest soulchasers Posted November 28, 2008 Share Posted November 28, 2008 1966. Here's the listing lifted from Dave Rimmer's site W01 - Norman Scott - Baby Don't Go / Ain't That A Heartache - 1966 the "Baby don't go" side on this is dated 1966, but the other side "Aint that a heartache" is dated 1973 (and it definitely sounds 70's), so i reckon the dates for this label are bit off Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
George G Posted November 28, 2008 Share Posted November 28, 2008 Many of these dates are incorrect, and the 'label numbers' quoted are in many cases the RCA pressing matrixes, which were assigned by the Indianapolis pressing plant, not Way Out. Within the next few weeks I will provide a more complete Way Out/BOS discography with accurate dates and pressing variations, which I'd like to run by to see what I've missed. BOS was the Gospel offshoot of Way Out, and some of the 'missing' numbers were assigned to BOS releases. Some of the 45s do have different pressings. Seems like the initial pressings were done at Boddie, and later by somewhere else (probably Archer in Detroit). I presume that many of you have figured out that Boddie 'numbered' their pressings using a 4 digit number with the first two digits being the year (70xx, 71xx, etc). This includes records on Boddie, Bounty, as well as the pressings for external clients (one of which would have been Way Out). Cataloging these numbered Boddies is probably the most arcane record documentation task there is. Cleveland had two very unusual small run custom pressing operations in the 60s and 70s, Boddie and PAMA. Good luck trying to find 'em! In the case of Jesse Fishers "You're not loving a beginner", there is a Boddie press (white label) and an Archer press (red/yellow label). The EQs and mastering of the two versions is different. I prefer the red/yellow one. I have a good hunch that the numbering series changed as different investors got involved. More later - George 1966. Here's the listing lifted from Dave Rimmer's site 2605 - Lou Ragland & Bandmasters - Never Let Me Go / Party At Lesters - 1964 2699 - The Springers - I Know Why / I Know My Baby Loves Me - 1964 2699 - The Springers - I Know Why / Last Heartbreak - 1964 2799/80 - The Springers - Last Heartbreak / Why - 1964 3359/60 - The Gaylords - Never Go Back To GA / Loose Beat - 196? 5564 - Joan Bias - I Don't Know What's Right Any More / Crazy Over You - 196? 5696 - The Springers - You Can Laugh / It's Been A Long Time - 1965 1966 - Verna & Bob - More Soul / I'm In Love With You - 1965 W01 - Norman Scott - Baby Don't Go / Ain't That A Heartache - 1966 1047 - The Sensations - Get On Up Mama / I Won't Be Hurt - 1966 5945 - Laura Green - Don Deopo / Come Have A Drink With Me - 1966 2001 - Bobby Wade - Four Walls And One Window / Can't You Hear Me Calling - 1966 2003 - The Harmonics - Which Way / Harmonics On The Warpath - 1966 2005 - The Sensations - Gonna Step Aside / Demanding Man - 1966 2006 - Volcanic Eruption - I've Got Something Going For Me / Red Robin - 1966 ? - Ben Iverson & The Hornets - Love Me / Fool's Rush In - 1967 4957 - Lester Johnson & The Hornets - Wedding Day / Jamaica Farewell - 1967 5947 - The Sensations - Too Shy / Please Baby, Please - 1967 5696 - The Springers - It's Been A Long Time / You Can Laugh - 1967 2669 - The Springers - I Know My Baby Loves Me So / I Know Why - 1967 2699 - The Springers - I Know Why / Last Heartbreak - 1967 1000 - The Sensations - Gotta Find Myself Another Girl / Lonely World - 1968 1001 - The Soul Notes - Don't Make Me Beg / How Long Will It Last - 1968 1002 - Fred Towles - Too Much Monkey Business / Part 2 - 1968 1003 - The Sensations - Oh / I Guess That's Life - 1968 1004 - Fred Towles & The Jacksonians - Hook It To The Mule / Inst. - 1969 1005 - The Sensations - It's A New Day / Two Can Make It - 1969 1006 - The Soul Notes - How Long Will It Last / I Got Everything I Need - 1969 1051 - The Soul Notes - How Long Will It Last / Don't Make Me Bag - 1969 011 - The Boss Singers - My God On High / So Many Years - 1970 101 - Ruby Carter & The Exceptional Three - Unlucky Girl / What About Me - 1971 103 - Bobby Wade - I'm In Love With You / Down Here On The Ground - 1971 104 - Jesse Fisher - You're Not Loving A Beginner / Waiting - 1971 105 - Embryo Infinity Rebirth - Let Me Tell You A Story / Walls - 1971 106 - Jesse Fisher - Why / Little John - 1971 984 - Jesse Fuller - Super Funky / Part 2 - 1972 100 - Jesse Fuller - Mr.Super Nobody / Don't Cheat On Me - 1973 Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
Guest mel brat Posted November 28, 2008 Share Posted November 28, 2008 (edited) Fascinating stuff. I love "You're Not Loving A Beginner", but had never heard of the so-called "original" white label/red type release until it started to be listed many years after it's Mecca heyday (1975). I'd be very interested to know which label Ian Levine was playing it on at that time! Edited November 28, 2008 by mel brat Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
George G Posted November 28, 2008 Share Posted November 28, 2008 (edited) In the case of Jesse Fishers "You're not loving a beginner", there is a Boddie press (white label) and an Archer press (red/yellow label). The EQs and mastering of the two versions is different. I prefer the red/yellow one. Sorry, I made a mistake. Norman Scott is the record that had the two pressings at Boddie (grey label) and at Archer(?) (red/yellow). Not sure where the two Jesse Fishers were pressed. Maybe Archer and ARP. They are still different masters as I mentioned. I don't have this all sorted out yet. - George Edited November 28, 2008 by George G Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
Guest gordon russell Posted November 28, 2008 Share Posted November 28, 2008 I think Tony is absolutely correct regarding this point. The particular copy of The Sensations for auction is about the cleanest copy of the record I've seen, so probably worth the bucks to those wishing to upgrade to a minter. A great record into the bargain: group Northern gets no better than this double-sider in my opinion. Something has occured to me about Way Out releases which exist on several variants of the label such as Bobby Wade I'm In Love With You and Jesse Fisher's You're Not Loving A Beginner: conventional wisdom has it that the first issue of these is on the red and white logo (as per Demanding Man), and that the other releases (grey in the case of Bobby Wade, magenta and yellow in the instance of Jesse Fisher) are later issues, carrying lesser pricetags. I wonder if this is really the case. My theory is that the ones on the red and white logo could very well be be later pressings on remaindered blanks of the "c.1966" stock. If you think about it any record label would press on the latest, 'hip and happening' variant of its label design first, then, when stocks of this are exhausted and a 45 demands another pressing run, on its older blanks if they happen to be lying around. Something to think about next time a red and white Jesse Fisher is offered at a price premium above the multicoloured label version. HELLO GARETH,think jesse fisher came out on the red and white label as well.......can't be positive though? Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
paultp Posted November 28, 2008 Share Posted November 28, 2008 HELLO GARETH,think jesse fisher came out on the red and white label as well.......can't be positive though? Agree with that, I've seen and bid on one on ebay but didn't get it. Would be interesting to know if the takes are the same or different and are the label nos different? Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
George G Posted November 29, 2008 Share Posted November 29, 2008 volcanic eruption is 2002 not 2006 Bob, All the copies of the VE record I've seen are numbered 2006 and dated 1970. Can you provide more details on this (scan is nice..) thanks, George Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
boba Posted November 29, 2008 Share Posted November 29, 2008 Bob, All the copies of the VE record I've seen are numbered 2006 and dated 1970. Can you provide more details on this (scan is nice..) thanks, George i pulled mine out and it did say 2006 on it. Dante's webpage must be wrong. vaguely related, but supposedly verna and rob (or at least verna) was in the group in addition to lou ragland. Their daughter emailed me and I sent her an mp3 and she said she and her mom (verna) didn't recognize the track. Link to comment Social source share More sharing options...
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